The Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) took effect on January 1st, 2024, and any new entities that are subject to the CTA will need to file reporting Beneficial Owner Information (BOI) within 90 days of establishment. Any entities affected by the new law that were in existence before 2024 will have until December 31, 2024, to file. It has been estimated the CTA will affect over 32 million entities.
This webinar will provide a deeper and more robust discussion on practical and action-oriented topics for the CTA, with an emphasis and examples tailored to situations a CPA is likely to encounter in advising clients. Whether your firm opts to complete CTA filings or not, you will assuredly be inundated with questions from clients and you will need to understand the implications of the CTA.
The CTA will require a massive amount of reporting that includes detailed information by entities, and those who own or have substantial control over those entities. Tax professionals compiling those reports need to know how to answer a myriad of important questions including the following:
Shenkman Law
Dual Practitioner, Financial Planner
[email protected]
(201) 845-8400
Martin M. Shenkman, CPA, MBA, PFS, AEP (distinguished), JD, is an attorney in private practice in Fort Lee, New Jersey, and New York City, New York, with Shenkman Law. His practice focuses on estate and tax planning as well as planning for closely-held businesses and estate administration. Throughout his career, Mr. Shenkman received awards and acknowledgments from the New Jersey Bar Association, Worth Magazine, CPA Magazine, the American Cancer Society, and the AICPA. Mr. Shenkman holds a Bachelor of Science from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, an MBA from the University of Michigan, a law degree from Fordham University School of Law. He is admitted to the bar in New York, New Jersey, and Washington D.C.
Shenkman Law
Associate
[email protected]
(201) 845-8400
Thomas is an associate in the Law Firm of Martin M. Shenkman, P.C with an emphasis on estate planning. He has lectured at the Notre Dame Tax & Estate Planning Institute, for the NJSBA and New Jersey Institute of Continuing Legal Education, and the National Academy of Continuing Legal Education. He has published articles in the American Bar Association E-Report, Wealthmanagement.com and Trusts & Estate Magazine. He is a member of the American Bar Association, Real Property, Trust and Estate Law and Business Law sections, the New York State Bar Association, the New Jersey State Bar Association and the Bergen County Estate Planning Council.
Walter works in tax areas involving high net worth clients, estates, trusts, charitable planning and exempt organizations. As past deputy executive director of New York’s CPA Society, he led the Society’s programs for professional practice issues with members, and in Albany and Washington. Walt was instrumental in developing New York’s LLC/LLP laws. Both Connecticut and New Jersey used this work to enact their LLC statutes.
Walt “grew up” in his family’s CPA firm, where he advised successful business owners and served the full range of middle income through ultra-high-net-worth clients. A frequent speaker and writer, Walt received the respective CPA Journal and The Tax Advisor “Max Block” and “Article of the Year” awards. Walt chairs several nonprofit audit committees and is Co-President of UJA/JCC Greenwich.